Everybody and their uncle knows that
Green Lantern: Blackest Night is coming. It's a highly anticipated story and if
Sinestro Corps War was any indication it'll be a
huge hit.
The conventional thing to do on comic blogs when a big story is coming is to
speculate on it. Everyone knows that I have a bit of a habit of doing that. I like to make predictions. Especially about the "secret villain behind it all."
Sometimes I get things half right.
Other times I miss things by a
quite a bit. But a win/loss record like that isn't going to keep me from speculating on
Blackest Night as well.
There is
someone behind this
Blackest Night build up. I think everyone can agree on that, more or less. Black Hand talks to someone in the shadows, the Anti-Monitor is turned into a black power battery by a mysterious force, and Scar speaks of
someone hiding in the black. Who could it be?
Perhaps the answers are hidden in 1981's
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps. This three issue miniseries was scripted by Len Wein (who attended the NYCC Green Lantern panel) from a plot by Mike Barr. Let's delve in, shall we?
Our story begins with Hal Jordan speeding toward Oa, having been summoned by the Guardians of the Universe. On his way he is intercepted by another Lantern: cosmic jailbait Arisia, who meets Hal Jordan here for the very first time.
Jesus Christ, Hal. Retcon be damned, she's like fifteen. It's
obvious.Anyway, Hal, Arisia, and the
entire Green Lantern Corps arrive on Oa where they wait for the inscrutable Guardians to arrive and say whatever it is they want to say. While they wait, Hal regales Arisia with tales of his, er,
conquests. Specifically, the time he took on Krona. I wonder why he would choose to tell
that story?
The Guardians eventually arrive and tell Hal to shut his flapping pie hole. Unfortunately, Hal's wasted too much time chatting up his new friend, and well...
Gee, I wonder whose ominous mailed hands
those are? Could they be...
Krona's!?
Boy, it's a damn good thing Hal told Arisia (and by extension the reader) about that time he kicked Krona's ass. We'd all be lost, otherwise.
What's that? I didn't bother to post that page? Ah, well then... Krona -- as seen by his blue skin -- is of the same immortal race as the Guardians. He decided that he wanted to see the birth of the universe, did a lot of nasty stuff, and then was doomed to wander the universe formless for the rest of time. That's the short version.
Luckily, that's all you need to know. Krona, understandably, is still a bit pissed about the whole being doomed to wander the universe formless for the rest of time. I suppose I can understand that. Luckily, he's only a viewscreen. Seemingly a bit shaken by this whole affair, the Green Lanterns decide that
maybe now would be a good time to charge up their rings.
Maybe.They move on with that classic oath, but
something is not right. The central power battery begins to shake violently. And then it...
The battery blows up and kills a whole lot of Lanterns in the process. With only 24 hours of ring charge left, The Guardians order
all the Green Lanterns to get their asses in gear, find Krona, and put a stop to him.
Neither Guardians nor Lanterns are aware that Krona is merely a
pawn in the game of a greater evil. One that a group of advance Guardians are soon about to know all too well...
The Guardians discover the gaping wound in the cosmos through which Krona returned to physical form. And there for the first time they come face to face with their
true foe:
The Guardians of the Universe realize that they're outmatched. They send one of their number back to call the Corps off of Krona and summon them to the rift. Meanwhile, the GLC is locked in combat with Krona and his minions. They manage to capture one of Krona's creatures, and the pitiful beast reveals to them a terrible secret:
Krona is dead. So is this pitiful informant. They are both of them and more besides
dead, and yet
they live. You see, when Krona was cast out he drifted through dimensions. Eventually he drifted into the
Realm of the Dead. The paradox of an immortal in the Realm of the Dead caused a rift between dimensions. As you can imagine,
that piqued the curiosity of the Realm of the Dead's boss. This guy:
Yeah, y'all can see where I'm going with this. That's
Nekron, Lord of the Unliving. He rules over the Realm of the Dead and
all who dwell therein. He's also powerful enough to bind Krona to his will and
kill Guardians.With each immortal Nekron slays, the rift to the Realm of the Living gets a little wider. And that's Nekron's plan: he wants into
our world. I'm sure you can imagine some of the things that a godlike being from the Realm of the Dead might do in the Realm of the Living.
Anyway, back to the story. Krona beats on Hal and the rest of the Corps, then hightails it back to the rift where he starts knocking heads and killing the Guardians that Nekron hasn't already snuffed out. The rift gets bigger and Nekron gets happier and happier.
The Green Lantern Corps arrives and a battle royale ensues between them and Nekron's army of the dead. Nekron pulls out all the stops, summoning
the dead loved ones of Corps members to slow them down.
It starts to work, until Hal Jordan decided to do one of the things he does best:
something stupid. He flys
through the portal into the Realm of the Dead.
But then, Hal's not a
complete idiot (I can't believe I said that). You see, he has a plan. Something Nekron said got those rusty wheels in his damaged head turning. Hal realizes that if
everyone who has ever died is in Nekron's Realm...
Then it's full of Green Lantnerns.Hal gets the deceased Lanterns to fight against Nekron. They can't actually hurt him -- he's too powerful and can't be destroyed. But they distract Nekron long enough for the Guardians to strike out at Krona and his army. Without Nekron's powers propping them up, they fall like a house of cards. The Guardians use their vague powers to close the rift, saving the universe from certain destruction. And then everything goes back to normal.
The story of the Green Lantern Corps' battle with Nekron, Lord of the Unliving is probably not well remembered. I only heard about it through some determined research into obscure Green Lantern villains. Because I know that Geoff Johns
loves to dig up obscure villains, make them over, and turn them into genuinely frightening and powerful menaces.
Which is why I think he's doing the same thing with Nekron. Geoff Johns is the kind of writer who these days will try to reuse an old concept or character before he creates something out of whole cloth. And the parallels are hard to ignore.
Tales of the Green Lantern Corps was the story of a mysterious entity summoning up an army of the dead to destroy the living. And as far as we can tell,
Blackest Night is going to be the story of a mysterious entity summoning up an army of the dead to destroy the living.
I won't be at all surprised if Geoff Johns takes Nekron (who's quite frightening, despite his silly name) throws him into a mixer with some fixins and then pulls out a villain that keeps me from sleeping at night.
(As an aside, I'll be away from home and without Internet access until Wednesday. So spend some time ruminating on what I've said here today, would you? Let me know if you think I'm on track -- or wildly off base.)Labels: Blackest Night, Green Lantern, Green Lantern Corps, Nekron